1. Carry,convey,transport,transmit imply taking or sending something from one place to another. Carry means to take by means of the hands, a vehicle, etc.: to carry a book; The boat carried a heavy load.Convey means to take by means of a nonhuman carrier: The wheat was conveyed to market by train. However, news, information, etc., can be conveyed by a human carrier: The secretary conveyed the message.Transport means to carry or convey goods, now usually by vehicle or vessel: to transport milk to customers.Transmit implies sending or transferring messages or hereditary tendencies: to transmit a telegram.8. support. 14. gain, secure.

carry-out

carry

v.

early 14c., from Anglo-French carier "to transport in a vehicle" or Old North French carrier "to cart, carry" (Modern French charrier), from Gallo-Romance *carrizare, from Late Latin carricare, from Latin carrum (see car).

Meaning "take by force" is from 1580s. Sense of "gain victory in an election" is from 1610s. Of sound, "to be heard at a distance" by 1896. Carrying capacity is attested from 1836. Carry on "continue to advance" is from 1640s; carryings-on "questionable doings" is from 1660s. Carry-castle (1590s) was an old descriptive term for an elephant.

n.

c.1600, "vehicle for carrying," from carry (v.). U.S. football sense attested by 1949.

carry

The Dictionary of American Slang, Fourth Edition by Barbara Ann Kipfer, PhD. and Robert L. Chapman, Ph.D.Copyright (C) 2007 by HarperCollins Publishers.Cite This Source

Idioms and Phrases with carry out

carry out

1.

Accomplish, bring to a conclusion, as in They carried out the mission successfully. Shakespeare had this term in King Lear (5:1): “And hardly shall I carry out my side, Her husband being alive.”
[ Late 1500s
]

2.

Put in practice or effect, as in We will carry out the new policy, or Please carry out my instructions.
[ Mid-1800s
]